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Your Cloud Workload Will Evolve as Applications Change

Your Cloud Workload Will Evolve as Applications Change

Today you are running software as a service (SaaS) or infrastructure applications that stay resident in the provider cloud, often locked behind semi-proprietary architectures. This is a logical first implementation that's common to most IT rollouts. The next step is also predictable: a turn to a more open architecture with standards in place for APIs and management tools. By taking this step, you unlock the potential to federate your private data centers with multiple provider cloud data centers, enabling greater workload mobility and the ability to deploy entirely new applications that will require a better network to run effectively.

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Management Wants to See Your Cloud Performance Metrics

As cloud implementations mature from trials or toe-dipping to full production, management will demand to see tangible benefits of the cloud deployment. The way you design your network can be a deal breaker to success. The network is the strategic lever to achieve the cloud benefits of lower costs, reduced deployment time and new functionality. In short, the cloud is only as good as the network.

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Cloud Storage Accounts for an Increasing Share of Corporate Data

Today, organizations typically use cloud infrastructure for simple storage backup to cloud data centers over low-speed IP networks, trickling the data asynchronously as the network permits. Typically, this use case fits small businesses with relatively low amounts of storage. Tomorrow, larger enterprises also will want to take advantage of lower-cost cloud storage for large amounts of storage. They will want a network that can dynamically respond to moving terabytes when the data needs to move without bottlenecks, security holes or dropped packets. No more sending hard disks via FedEx to the cloud data center.

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A More Efficient Network Is Critical for Cloud Data Center Connections

IT organizations are highly motivated to drive efficiencies, first through data center consolidation, then through virtualization. The next step is to use cloud services, which have been documented to bring enterprises up to 25 percent in infrastructure savings on IT services and hardware expenses. In turn, the network is also a key enabler for cloud service providers to operate multiple data centers as a shared pool of virtual data centers, which could enable a 35 percent reduction in total cloud data center resources. The network is the key ingredient that ties everything together, serving as a backplane across the data centers for flexible delivery of applications and services.

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Inter-Data Center Networks Are Also Going Virtual

A virtualized network partitions resources in several ways; examples of this are virtual circuits (EVPLs), virtual wavelengths (Optical Transport Network, or OTN), virtual switches (VSIs) and virtual networks (VPNs and Optical Virtual Private Networks, or OVPNs). Virtualization of the network provides network efficiency because it coordinates bandwidth and topology to the specific application need at a point in time. This eliminates the need to size all data center network interconnection facilities for a peak capacity that is only rarely used.

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SDN Is Key to Greater Flexibility, Lower Costs

Workload orchestration between cloud data centers and between enterprise and cloud data centers will be driven by policy-based software automation tools. On-demand change in performance parameters— such as bandwidth scalability—will be accomplished through high-level software interfaces into the network control planes, not by an operator using a command line interface to the equipment. This performance on demand will be triggered at the application level, ensuring that the adjustments to the network and to the cloud meet the business requirements.

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A Cloud Network Needs to Scale Dynamically

A north-south traffic flow is defined as user-to-machine through a tiered IP network architecture. This is exercised in the cloud for SaaS-type applications in which the application is simply moved from the in-house data center to the cloud-provider data center server. East-west traffic flows are machine-to-machine within, and increasingly between, data centers. Such traffic has much more stringent quality-of-service requirements. In the near future, we'll see at least an order of magnitude more east-west data workloads driven by applications like storage synchronization, inter-data-center storage virtualization and virtual machine migrations. This means the cloud network needs to be designed for performance to meet the traffic flow change and intensity challenges of the future.

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A Network Must Be Able to Move a Large Amount of Data Very Quickly

You need a flatter Layer 0/1/2 network architecture between data centers that delivers better scalability, latency and deterministic performance. With this architecture, the network won't be a bottleneck when you need it the most, and it will deliver the lowest cost per bit throughput.

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Plan for the Worst

Whether you use the cloud as a fail-safe to on-premises operations or as your primary IT resource, you need to be prepared for a worst-case scenario, such as a natural disaster or unexpected peaks in traffic. You or your cloud provider may need to move hundreds of your virtual machines or data stores from the current data center to another data center in the cloud—potentially alongside those of many other enterprises. To move these workloads in time to avoid or recover from disaster—without damaging your business—you'll need a network that can rapidly add and reallocate capacity to your business continuity-disaster recovery data center.

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A Virtual Data Center Architecture Can Cut Costs, Boost Efficiency

"Data center without walls" describes an architecture that creates a multi-data center, hybrid cloud environment able to function as a set of virtual data centers from a common resource pool to address any workload demand. Enterprises will want to access cloud resources anywhere and at any time. Service providers will want to offer cloud services differentiated by state-of-the-art programmable network access and economies of scale that leverage their data centers. Cloud providers will handle uncertain demand requirements and failover by more efficiently allocating workloads across multiple data centers. The cloud backbone network is the critical link for providing cost-effective scalability, security and on-demand services that enable the virtual data center.